Laws of Motion and Gravity
Most recent answer: 10/22/2007
Q:
please describe the laws of motion and gravity,so that i can present it to my class.
- chris cleary (age 11)
darien,il,usa
- chris cleary (age 11)
darien,il,usa
A:
Newtons Three Laws of Motion and his Law of Gravity are probably the
most famous of all physics. They govern the motion of objects that we
see in our everyday lives.
Newtons First Law of Motion says that an object will remain in its state of motion unless acted upon by force. Essentially, this means that if an object is not moving, it will remain still until a force (a push or pull) acts on it. Likewise, if an object is moving, it will continue to move in the same direction with the same speed in a straight line until a force acts on it. In either case the motion is changed.
Newtons Second Law of Motion says that force is equal to the mass of the object times its acceleration. Remember, a force is a push or pull, and mass just means how much of the object you have. Acceleration is how fast the velocity (speed with direction) is changing. The Second Law essentially says that forces are necessary to accelerate objects with mass, and it defines how big that force is for the particular object.
Newtons Third Law of Motion says that for every force acting on an object by another object there is a force that acts upon the first object by the second one. This second force is equal to the first and is in the opposite direction. Whenever you have forces between two objects of about the same size, you can see this. When a pool ball hits another one, you can see that both change their velocities. The changes in their velocities are in opposite directions. Thats because the forces on them point opposite ways. If you and a friend are on ice and one of you gives the other a shove, you will move opposite directions. it doesnt matter who decided to shove- the forces on the two of you were equal and opposite. Of course when one of the objects is the Earth, its hard to notice the force on it, because its mass is so big it wont accelerate much if you give it a shove.
Newtons Law of Gravity says that gravity is a force that acts between any two objects with mass, and that force increases if the mass increases and decreases if the distance between the two objects increases. This force is always attractive, that is, it always works to pull the objects closer together. This is why objects fall to the ground and the moon doesnt fly away from the earth. Newtons Laws have been indispensable in our world. They are certainly not all of physics, but the use of them has accomplished much--not the least of which was getting man to the moon!
John ZuHone
Newtons First Law of Motion says that an object will remain in its state of motion unless acted upon by force. Essentially, this means that if an object is not moving, it will remain still until a force (a push or pull) acts on it. Likewise, if an object is moving, it will continue to move in the same direction with the same speed in a straight line until a force acts on it. In either case the motion is changed.
Newtons Second Law of Motion says that force is equal to the mass of the object times its acceleration. Remember, a force is a push or pull, and mass just means how much of the object you have. Acceleration is how fast the velocity (speed with direction) is changing. The Second Law essentially says that forces are necessary to accelerate objects with mass, and it defines how big that force is for the particular object.
Newtons Third Law of Motion says that for every force acting on an object by another object there is a force that acts upon the first object by the second one. This second force is equal to the first and is in the opposite direction. Whenever you have forces between two objects of about the same size, you can see this. When a pool ball hits another one, you can see that both change their velocities. The changes in their velocities are in opposite directions. Thats because the forces on them point opposite ways. If you and a friend are on ice and one of you gives the other a shove, you will move opposite directions. it doesnt matter who decided to shove- the forces on the two of you were equal and opposite. Of course when one of the objects is the Earth, its hard to notice the force on it, because its mass is so big it wont accelerate much if you give it a shove.
Newtons Law of Gravity says that gravity is a force that acts between any two objects with mass, and that force increases if the mass increases and decreases if the distance between the two objects increases. This force is always attractive, that is, it always works to pull the objects closer together. This is why objects fall to the ground and the moon doesnt fly away from the earth. Newtons Laws have been indispensable in our world. They are certainly not all of physics, but the use of them has accomplished much--not the least of which was getting man to the moon!
John ZuHone
(published on 10/22/2007)